Tuesday, December 07, 2010

In any case, it got me interested in the importance of transitions. Back in the old, pre-ajax, pre-broadband days, we would click on a link, go get a cup of coffee and then come back to a new screen. In the meantime the little "loading" icon would spin which would let us know that something was happening.

Nowadays, not only is it possible to change part of a page without reloading the whole page (thanks to AJAX), but with our new browsers and broadband connections, this could change so fast that we don't even notice.

I will be the first to admit that early versions of JavaScript transitions were not only buggy, but they seemed to be a luxury. For a start, the fades and slides were slow and jittery and led to a bad user experience. The extra JS libraries also added to page load. At the end of the day, who cares how we got where we were going as long as we got there.

Now however, they seem a bit more of a necessity. They let the user know what happened on the page and where.

Going forward, it would be nice to see some conventions appear as well. Fade in for dialogs, slide left for new page, slide right for old, etc...